Wonderful discourse today. It is nice. (01)
I suggest that the discussion turn to Cory's (02)
"Enclosed expands on the "buyer/broker/manufacturer" example as a proposed
SOA demo. " (03)
because this is the focus of this forum... the demo. (04)
****** (05)
So for those who are still interested in the "off-topic" discussion... (06)
and to conclude on the SOA (and related issues related to nature of
community and self) (07)
(even though I say these things with "authority tone" I am easily found
incorrect and can recognize this when it is pointed out (or even immediately
after sending a communication) (08)
The notion "of what is a community" might best be answered by using both the
community of interest and community of practice language and related
language from the knowledge management community. In the (to be developed)
draft CCSM we will use this language. But defining a community is like
defining a concept (it is not so easy to be exact and explicit). (09)
But the work we are writing up now uses "social network theory", and yes we
know that a lot of social network theory is really not very good scholarship
(but some is). One has to sort this out, but in our case, SOA needs to have
a well specified notion of a "boundary" between "me" and "you", so that
explanatory coherence and "meaning" can shift ... (010)
The proposed (to be proposed by not yet proposed (smiles)) CCSM (community
centric service orientation) specification needs to take some real social
science and link this real social science with some of the standards - such
as the 11 I listed (and perhaps the additional one Cory suggested). (011)
In the BCNGroup Roadmap (the notion of self and community are wrapped up in
the "need" to create "situational" ontology that has a finer "pragmatic
axis" (sorry if these terms are not well defined - that definition is what
we are trying to give). (012)
Co-occurrence of words and phrases (or other things) is one way to
measure the phenomenon of self or community (conjecture - but with good
evidence) boundaries and behaviors. This co-occurrence measurement
establishes the connection (in the Roadmap) between explicit ontology (OWL,
Topic Maps) and implicit ontology (naries, semantic extraction information
structure). Differential Ontology and Formative (situational) ontology is
then something that should have some notions of homology or isomorphism. (013)
see my drawing at:
http://www.bcngroup.org/procurementModel/to-be/dof.htm
(but this is very early notion) I apologize for my work - it is so far from
being easy and is perhaps often just not right. The <a,r,b> notation is
more general that the RDF notation. (014)
Joe, I am appreciative of your questions/comments (teasing) regarding non-IT
centric. The problem is in our use of language. We do not wish to exclude
the "IT-community" as being an important community - in fact my group's
internal work is focused on bringing OASIS BCM (plus new extensions which we
are thinking as "Community Centric Service Methodology" or CCSM (and
again - these extensions are not approved or even discussed much outside of
four or five individuals. (015)
But, the IT-centricness has to be pushed against WHEN the technology begins
to blur the difference between a naturally occurring exchange in an
"environment" between living systems and a formally defined "web-service". (016)
Again I feel that three phrases are important so as to make distinctions (017)
services web-services service webs (018)
and we will use this language in the CCSM. (019)
The CCSM will focus, as does the current BCM, on the definition of the
naturally occurring exchanges within the boundaries and across boundaries of
"social networks". A key will be in measuring the emergence of new
boundaries and the changes in entity behavior and thus the social network
theory. (020)
So transaction spaces are "organized" in some fashion so that CoI and CoP
can demonstrate/express "self". (021)
We know of no technical specification (other than perhaps Rex Brook's groups
work on Human mark up language) that addresses this notion of "community
centric service modeling". (022)
The answer to this question of "self" is not going to be simple. But it can
be done in an authoritative fashion. (023)
BCM (Business Centric Methodology) is under review an not yet approved by
OASIS voting. (024)
Part of the value of BCM, in our opinion, is that there is a stratification
of activities, (025)
conceptualization (at the bottom - or start)
business (which is community centric - and not (necessarily IT centric))
extension
implementation (026)
the specification document discusses this at some length. (027)
****** ok so enough said about this now... I have a lot of work to do to
get the proposal for a OASIS TC in order. (028)
Help is appreciated, as is joint sponsorship of the end product (if that
happens). (029)
I have created a groove space (so anyone with windows who would like an
invitation please sent to me at psp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) (030)
-----Original Message-----
From: soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Chiusano Joseph
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 1:13 PM
To: Service-Oriented Architecture CoP; Andrew S. Townley;
rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Nathan Einwechter; Dennis L. Thomas; David RR Webber (XML); John F.
Sowa
Subject: RE: [soa-forum] SOA and a peer review of mark - 3 technology (031)
That's ok Paul - thanks for the clarification (I was fine with either
answer, just wanted to be informed). (032)
Open question for all (including me): What characteristics would a
community-centric SOA methodology have that a non-community-centric SOA
methodology would not? Or more simply, what would be the primary
differences between community-centric SOA and non-community-centric SOA? (033)
Or is it more about the application of the technology(s) per
requirements, than about methodologies? (034)
Joe (035)
Joseph Chiusano
Associate
Booz Allen Hamilton (036)
700 13th St. NW, Suite 1100
Washington, DC 20005
O: 202-508-6514
C: 202-251-0731
Visit us online@ http://www.boozallen.com (037)
-----Original Message-----
From: soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Paul S Prueitt
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 3:07 PM
To: Service-Oriented Architecture CoP; Andrew S. Townley;
rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Nathan Einwechter; David RR Webber (XML); Dennis L. Thomas; John F.
Sowa
Subject: RE: [soa-forum] SOA and a peer review of mark - 3 technology (038)
My language is very clear that this is not been vetted as yet by OASIS. (039)
One can try to make these things as clear as possible, but still fail to
cross the t s and dot the i s. (040)
My appology (041)
-----Original Message-----
From: soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Chiusano Joseph
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 11:45 AM
To: Service-Oriented Architecture CoP; Andrew S. Townley;
rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Nathan Einwechter; Dennis L. Thomas; David RR Webber (XML); John F.
Sowa
Subject: RE: [soa-forum] SOA and a peer review of mark - 3 technology (042)
All, (043)
Just a quick clarification please, so that there is no misunderstanding
by any party/at any level: (044)
Is "OASIS CCSM" something that has been vetted with OASIS leadership and
is in process? Or is it being expressed as a possibility that could be
realized in the future, where no vetting has been done with OASIS? (045)
Also, if it helps: The OASIS SOA Reference Architecture work will - I
anticipate - include a mapping of at least some of the standards listed
below (and perhaps others that are not listed) to SOA. (046)
Joe (047)
Joseph Chiusano
Associate
Booz Allen Hamilton (048)
700 13th St. NW, Suite 1100
Washington, DC 20005
O: 202-508-6514
C: 202-251-0731
Visit us online@ http://www.boozallen.com (049)
-----Original Message-----
From: soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:soa-forum-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Paul Prueitt
(ontologystream)
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 3:59 PM
To: 'Andrew S. Townley'; rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; Service-Oriented
Architecture CoP
Cc: David RR Webber (XML); Nathan Einwechter; 'Dennis L. Thomas'; John
F. Sowa
Subject: [soa-forum] SOA and a peer review of mark - 3 technology (050)
Andrew, (051)
Your effort to understand what Ballard has been doing is paying off, it
is easy to see. You are covering ground that takes some time for those
who are prepared, and can not be traversed by those who are not
prepared. (052)
The dependency of the full reality of a "concept" on an experiential
(see work by Peirce and others in semiotics) or perceptual act assigns
to this full reality a "pragmatic" axis where category formation is "in
process" and under re-creation. Thus "knowledge representation" of a
concept is both relative to the experience and is not (fully)
stationary. (053)
But to the extend that the categories forming are strongly similar to
"invariance" in other concepts (also being experienced), then we can see
a shared scope to "something". We also see the bases for QSAR.... as
discussed in Chapter 4 and 6 of (054)
http://www.bcngroup.org/area3/pprueitt/book.htm (055)
The second school calls this perceptual invariance, and "semantic
covers"
are related to (in my mind) Sowa, Ballard, Adi, and other theories of
semantic primitive. (056)
At this point we face some technical difficulties. Should the real time
measurement of social discourse use the Sowa, the Ballard, or the Adi
set of primitives - (or are each of these sufficient in specific ways
and not sufficient in other ways)? (057)
Over the next 30 -45 days I am focusing my effort on the knowledge
management community and practices that have been developed and used for
the purpose of knowledge elicitation. (058)
The knowledge elicitation might be fully specified as a OASIS standard,
and we are looking at this carefully as a means to support community
centric service methodology (CCSM). We might also see a supporting
specification on SOA with Topic Maps. (059)
A successful OASIS CCSM specification will need to show relationship and
use of the following (060)
WSDL
ebXML
BCM
Topic Maps
OWL Full
BPEL
BPMN
UML
SOA=IM
SOA-CS
FERA (061)
I do not see ebSOA distinctly and have left this out of my list for now,
since I feel that ebXML and FERA and BPEL cover the space. (062)
Stratification of the individual conceptualization (as in the BCM lower
layer of the four BCM layers) and automated aggregation of a community
layer (BCM's "business layer") is the key to the technological
innovation suggested in the BCNGroup RoadMap. (063)
-----Original Message-----
From: Andrew S. Townley [mailto:andrew.townley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 1:26 AM
To: rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Dennis L. Thomas; Paul Prueitt (ontologystream)
Subject: RE: a peer review of mark - 3 technology (064)
Hi Dick, (065)
Thanks for answering. No problems on the delay. (066)
Please forgive the naive questions, I'm still on a bit of a vertical
learning curve with this stuff. However, with the help of Google and
archived comments from yourself, I think I answered my fundamental
question: how does your work deal with the idea that the understanding
of a concept is dependent on the person understanding/perceiving that
concept within their current context (as stated by David Bohm in
"Wholeness and the Implicate Order")? (067)
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the answer is: it doesn't. (068)
I found some information from a discussion between Paul, yourself and
John Sowa from back in 2001 along with the PDF version of the FAQ and
"First Commercial Knowledge Asset Production Process" from your website.
In digesting this, I think I understand the following: (069)
* a knowledge base is initially created to address a specific need,
therefore it is only representing the theories which directly relate to
the business needs of the stakeholders. (070)
In relation to my question, this means that you have created/defined a
shared understanding of reality within a given domain. (071)
* Within this established knowledge base and set of "compatibile"
theories, it is clear that there can be only one unique definition for
each concept, otherwise the fundamental theories would not be
compatible. (072)
* Paul's "choice points" that he's been talking to me about are really
each n-ary concept node with connecting nodes in the overall concept
graph. (073)
If I understand what I read, these connections are actually based on
assumptions or constraints which have been identified as related during
the creation of the model and populated during the ingest of information
into the system. (074)
* From the above, the ontology represented by the knowledge asset is
domain-specific. (075)
* The knowledge base is not intended to explore new themes outside the
original domain or provide considerations of alternate views of
"reality", because they would change the domain scope of the ontology. (076)
I'm lead to this conclusion from the phrase in the FAQ: (077)
"until every question the knowledgebase was intended to answer." (bullet
#1, page 15) (078)
>From this, I am assuming that adding additional information into the
knowledge base will create new connections and relationships within the
concept graph, but these will be based on the theories codified into the
creation of the "knowledge operating system" when the asset is designed.
>From this, I am curious how easy it is to expand the theories within a
knowledge asset to new domains. At what point does the cohesiveness and
uniqueness of a concept break down? Is this possible, or is it
explicitly or implicitly prevented within the design of the system? (079)
In the interests of full disclosure, I am only beginning to be exposed
to KM, KR, semantics and ontology, so maybe these are questions that are
obvious once I have the background. Also, feel free to ignore or
answer/address any of the above as you see fit. I'm sure you're very
busy. (080)
>From what I've read over the last couple of days, I really do think
your
work is very interesting. As a human, some of the future implications
of it if it becomes as successful as you want are a bit scary, but I can
certainly relate to the drivers you mention originating from
conventional software system design. (081)
At any rate, all this has gotten me interested enough in aspects of this
field to try and learn more about it. Having read the syllabus from
your Winter Quarter 2005 course, I hope you reach the audience you
intend. It is clear that even through exposure to the material in the
briefest way, it expands the way one thinks. (082)
Thanks very much for your time, (083)
ast (084)
On Wed, 2006-04-05 at 13:07, rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> Paul and Andrew
>
> Sorry to be so slow in responding.
>
> We are getting the new course organized today with some uncertainty as
to
> UCI Extension's ability to reach the audience we would like. In past
> iterations Dennis put the class together out of senior project
management
> specialists and business owners. This time we are trying more
diligently
to
> reach into the younger labor pool of want-to-be knowledge engineers.
>
> From my perspective as a physical scientist, the significant
contributors
to
> any n-ary are "degrees of freedom" -- decisive choices seemingly
available
> to any decision maker. As with any use of theory, the ultimate
correctness
> of the list they compile may be guilty of mixing apples with oranges.
>
> Still we can expect that techniques like factor analysis, sensitivity,
etc.
> will progressively speak of first order, second order, etc.
approximations
> to one or more operant theories. Engineers typically focus on
"decision
> drivers" -- the presence of compelling theories ("conops", concepts of
> operation) with the power to force a decision into nearest first
alignment
> with the goal sought. Once in the ballpark, then all other issues may
be
> examined for their particular beneficial or adverse consequences in
> assessing their ultimate decision impact.
>
> Clearly the situational degrees of freedom are easiest to argue as
> potentially most relevant, unless the decision path studied explicitly
voids
> their consideration or need.
>
> The necessary presence of human decision makers with varying degrees
of
> experience and authority is an early requirement and necessity in
avoiding
> asset liabilities beyond those acceptable as simple helpful advice.
> Obviously the early race to reference dominance will begin as soon as
Mark
3
> hits the market and demonstrates its competitive virtues. Thereafter
the
> first stylistic race is on -- in defining the unique style and format
to
be
> associated with "patterns of thought." Decisions to quibble on that
> characterization and its unique, short-term memory requirement are
likely
to
> be increasingly fruitless -- here forward.
>
> Once the earliest styles and virtue are accepted, then the reference
> dominance race will favor those pushing market closing initiatives
based
> upon existing, non-electronic knowledge assets and previously
marketable
> reputations for authority. This race will be hard and costly because
the
> scope of resources needed will jump quickly to whole libraries.
Publishers
> are typically most conservative and they compete constantly to realign
and
> re-factor their asset lists competitively -- so publishing mergers and (085)
> acquisitions should become endemic.
>
> Many vendors will step forward and compete heavily on cost and massive (086)
> strategic acquisitions from available public sources. Of necessity
these
> must concentrate first in specific job related categories. The
earliest
> offerings will offer easy pickings for everyone claiming scholarly
> authority, but that kind of nitpicking can be overwhelmed by the
massive
> scale of non-electronic holdings available. The more constructive
approaches
> are those that favor professional detailing of theory-acceptance and
> outcomes base evidences of successful practice.
>
> The most important early work fill be aimed at modeling
standardizations
> based upon conventional 2-dimensional representations (mediating
structures)
> re-expressed in n-dimensional forms. That activity forces us to
radically
> rethink our linguistic bias toward subsumption hierarchies -- the
subject
of
> my "first lesson's learned letter."
>
> These are extraordinary times for new leadership to step forward --
jump
in,
> the field is wide open.
>
> Dick
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Paul Prueitt (ontologystream) [mailto:psp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 2:41 PM
> To: 'Andrew S. Townley'; rlballard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; Dennis L. Thomas
> Subject: RE: a peer review of mark - 3 technology
>
>
> Dick and Dennis
>
> Andrew is asking a question about the uniqueness of the semantic n-ary
>
> I am finding that Andrew asks many of the same type of questions as I
> do/did.
>
> Perhaps, Dick; if you have time, you could reflect on why this
question
came
> up, and how you might answer.
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew S. Townley [mailto:andrew.townley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2006 5:36 PM
> To: Paul Prueitt (ontologystream)
> Subject: Re: a peer review of mark - 3 technology
>
>
> Hi Paul,
>
> Thanks for the slides. They were very interesting. Wow. If that's
> what you folks have been up to, it's very, very cool. I didn't think
it
> made sense to respond to everyone, because I just had a question maybe (087)
> you could clear up a bit.
>
> In the slides, the implication is that there is always one single
> semantic definition for a concept or thing. How does this relate to
> context? On page 16, it seems to be involved as assumptions, but what (088)
> about perception? How does this fit in with the likes of Bohm and
> Feynman (and even Heraclitus for that matter) on reality and truth not (089)
> being fixed notions?
>
>
> The KM/OASIS reading is on the agenda for tomorrow. Should be able to (090)
> get through a lot of what I have.
>
> Thanks again for the slides--fascinating...
>
> ast
>
> On Tue, 2006-03-28 at 17:35, Paul Prueitt (ontologystream) wrote:
> > Azamat,
> >
> >
> >
> > You may wish to consider this presentation and to make a principled
> > discussion about the way in which Dick Ballard is using his terms..
> >
> >
> >
> > To assert specific implications.
> >
> >
> >
> > I agree with John Sowa on many elements of analysis, particularly
> > about the need to pull back into a conservative position, with
respect
> > to use of language to assert things implicitly.
> >
> >
> >
> > For example "machines that know each other" or "machines that know".
> > can both be ok in context to what are the implicit assertions IF a
> > second school position is assumed. So we (the second school) mean
> > that through human use the n-ary information structure in the Mark 3 (091)
> > will use structural information to bring finite state machines to a
> > specific state. These state transitions and the representation of
> > structure within information (represented in the n-ary form) is
> > clearly a simplification of the current (XML registry/repository)
> > standards.
> >
> >
> >
> > That the nary transforms is conducting a type of "knowledge
> > processing", I would concur. But I am close to the boundary - and
do
> > not wish to step into first school language use.
> >
> >
> >
> > A "knowledge operating system" is possible (as Dick, Don Mitchell
and
> > I have been discussing since 2000).
> >
> >
> >
> > No buzz here just a proper and clear description of the magic that
> > could be available if n-ary ontology is used properly ( as I feel
the
> > Mark 3 will allow). But there is no need to give the assertion that (092)
> > the machine becomes endowed with a soul .. (An interesting
discussion
> > could be engaged here regarding quantum computing and the emergence
of
> > a machine spirit due to the non-locality effects).
> >
> >
> >
> > So the trick is to stay away from inferred assertions that end up
> > bothering some people, even business people.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > You know my position well, so perhaps you might orient your thinking (093)
> > to second school viewpoint (as much as you feel is comfortable). and (094)
> > see if there is some minor correct to terminological use that would
> > help both Ballard and the knowledge science revolution.
> >
> >
> >
> > Your work could quite easily be converted into the n-ary form and
> > reside as a Mark 3 resource.. As a matter of fact.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > I have included in the bcc some who may wish to join a discussion
> > about this. but which I place in bcc so that they do not feel a need (095)
> > to respond unless they have time to do so.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
______________________________________________________________________
> >
> > From: Dennis L. Thomas [mailto:dlthomas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> > Sent: Monday, March 27, 2006 8:06 PM
> > To: Linda M Wynott
> > Cc: Richard L. Ballard
> > Subject: Re: Presentation PDF - Delphi II event, Phoenix
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Linda,
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Please find attached Dr. Ballard's Creating Systems That Know
> > presentation in PDF form. This is a 3.1MB file.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Please know that as a result of the high caliber crowd that will be
> > attending the Phoenix event, Dr. Ballard has decided to unveil his
> > entire Knowledge Science as a lead into the F/A-18
database/simulation
> > integration project.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > This is significant because for the first time Ballard presents his
> > entire KNOWLEDGE SCIENCE, defines what KNOWLEDGE is based on this
> > science, what KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT means from the perspective of
> > knowledge science, how KNOWLEDGE can be measured, and how machines
can
> > capture knowledge at absolute bit limits - and reason with that
> > knowledge RATIONALLY like humans do. This presentation also explains (096)
> > how Knowledge Foundations' N-Dimensional technology integrates
> > unlimited concepts, ideas, thought patterns and the theory that
gives
> > them meaning into PREDICTIVE SEMANTIC WEBS.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Your interest in this valuable work, and your invitation to present
at
> > Delphi Phoenix, is very much appreciated.
> >
> >
> >
> --
> Join me in Dubrovnik, Croatia on May 8-10th when I will be speaking at (097)
> InfoSeCon 2006. For more information, see www.infosecon.org.
>
>
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>
--
Join me in Dubrovnik, Croatia on May 8-10th when I will be speaking at
InfoSeCon 2006. For more information, see www.infosecon.org. (098)
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